Sunday, June 11, 2017

Spontaneity and Pleasure

"The essence of pleasure is spontaneity."- Germaine Greer"Why not seize the pleasure at once, how often is happiness destroyed by preparation, foolish preparations."- Jane Austen

"Perhaps all pleasure is only relief."- William Burroughs

"Man, Nietzsche contended, is a being that has leapt beyond the "bestial bounds of the mating season" and seeks pleasure not just at fixed intervals but perpetually. Since, however, there are fewer sources of pleasure than his perpetual desire for pleasure demands, nature has forced man on the "path of pleasure contrivance." Man, the creature of consciousness whose horizons extend to the past and the future, rarely attains complete fulfillment within the present, and for this reason experiences something most likely unknown to any animal, namely boredom. This strange creature seeks a stimulus to release him from boredom. If no such stimulus is readily available, it simply needs to be created. Man becomes the animal that plays. Play is an invention that engages the emotions; it is the art of stimulating the emotions. Music is a prime example. Thus, the anthropological and physiological formula for the secret of art: "The flight from boredom is the mother of all art." "- Rudiger Safranski, Nietzsche: A Philosophical Biography, p. 23Seven Pleasures: Essays on Ordinary Happiness By Willard Spiegelman. The seven simple pleasures discussed are: dancing, reading, walking, looking, listening, swimming, and writing. If you included Taijiquan as "dancing" then all of these can be solitary activities. Picador, 2010. 208 pages. ISBN: 9780312429676.